Sequels of Erabon Prophecy Trilogy: What Comes After Myeem
After the first book, Myeem, readers can expect the Sequels of Erabon Prophecy Trilogy to expand into a high-stakes interplanetary conflict where the protagonist, Nuke, must move from surviving an alien world to actively preventing its destruction.
The subsequent books shift the focus from Nuke’s initial culture shock to the arduous political and spiritual task of uniting a fractured solar system.
Sharab(Book Two): Escalating Conflict and Civil War
In the second book, the mission to unite the alien clans takes a dark turn.
The Brink of War: Nuke’s attempts to bring two alien cultures together on the planets Sharab and Ramah backfire, leading them to the brink of a devastating civil war.
Intertwined Cultures: He discovers that these two worlds are deeply codependent, and his every action seems to cause a deeper schism rather than unity.
A Race Against Time: Nuke must work frantically with local leaders to resolve these differences before the civilizations collapse entirely.
Qerach (Book Three): The Final Push for Unity
In the final book, the scale of the challenge reaches its peak.
New Worlds: Nuke travels to the final two planets, Qerach and Aphiah, accompanied by friends he has united from previous worlds.
Unwilling Allies: On these planets, the inhabitants look more like humans, yet they are the most resistant to Nuke’s mission and the will of their deity, Erabon.
Ultimate Salvation or Destruction: The series concludes with a final test of whether Nuke can facilitate a “uniting of the worlds” or if his efforts will plunge the entire system into ultimate destruction.
As for Nuke and his romance with Ti’sulh, it will continue to grow and offer a more intimate through-line amidst the planetary chaos. Also, Nuke gradually realizes that his return to Earth through the interstellar gates is increasingly unlikely, forcing him to fully embrace his identity as the “Prophetic Forerunner” within the alien system.
The Resolution
Here are the specific themes and scientific concepts that conclude the series:
Scientific Concepts:
Technological Worship: A core tenet of the conclusion is the idea that advanced technology is not a distraction from God, but a “way one can offer up worship.” In this future, mastering complex systems is a sacred act of service.
Interplanetary Logistics: Nuke must physically link the final planets—Qerach and Aphiah—using the interstellar gates. The science of pharmacokinetics (how substances move through a system) serves as a metaphor for how “unity” must circulate through the six-planet “body” for the prophecy to trigger.
Logical Culmination: The author uses his strong scientific bent to frame the deity’s return as a predictable, logical outcome of a perfectly balanced system, rather than a random supernatural event.
Biblical Parallels
The Consummation of All Things: The third book mirrors the biblical theme of consummation, the final stage of God’s story where all creation is restored to its intended state.
The Unifying Covenant: Nuke acts as the “messenger” who facilitates a new covenant among the alien races. This parallels the biblical prophecy of a Savior who unites Jew and Gentile into a “new people.”
Preparing the Way: As the prophetic forerunner, Nuke’s role is modeled after figures like John the Baptist or the prophets of the Apocalypse, whose sole purpose is to prepare a people for the physical return of their King.
Metaphorical Redemption: Using metaphorical imagery similar to C.S. Lewis, the series ends by showing that the “ultimate salvation” of the planets is only possible once the internal “conflict and division” of the inhabitants is overcome.
The series concludes by asking if Nuke’s scientific efforts will result in ultimate salvation or ultimate destruction for the six worlds.